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Salesforce is now facing the very real threat of activist shareholders overthrowing its board and forcing the sale of mega-acquisitions like Slack and Tableau

Salesforce founder Marc Benioff, wearing a sports coat jacket and in front of a blue background on a stage, extends his hands forward during a talk.Marc Benioff, Salesforce CEO and cofounder

NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP via Getty Images

  • Salesforce is now being targeted by a second activist investor: Elliott Management.
  • Activist investors could overhaul Salesforce’s board and force it to divest acquisitions like Slack. 
  • Salesforce’s entire board is up for reelection this year, giving activists a window to act.

Salesforce has had a turbulent few months, including massive layoffs and an executive exodus that included a co-chief executive. But the real chaos may be yet to come.

The cloud software giant is now being targeted by activist firm Elliott Management, which has taken a big stake in the company. That makes Elliott the second such firm to take aim at Salesforce, after Starboard Value disclosed its stake in the company in October as it pushed for cost-cutting at the company. 

In the short term, the move has Salesforce employees worried about more layoffs to come beyond those already announced, as these activists push CEO Marc Benioff to show greater profit margins, Insider reported this week. 

In the longer term, however, Wall Street insiders believe that Elliott’s involvement could signal more changes beyond just cost-cutting.

It’s a very real possibility that these investors could oust most, if not all, of Salesforce’s board of directors in one go. And if that wasn’t enough, some analysts believe that these activist firms could push Benioff to at least explore the possibility of divesting mega-acquisitions like Slack, MuleSoft, and Tableau. It could even result in Salesforce ending its remote-work policies and mandating at least some employees to come back into the office, analysts speculate.

Salesforce, unlike many other tech companies, only appoints its board members to serve for one-year terms, meaning they have to be reelected by shareholders every single year. JMP Securities analyst Pat Walravens tells Insider that Elliott and Starboard could take advantage of the situation by mustering the support to replace many or most of those board seats with their own candidates at this year’s meeting later this year.

That’s not necessarily a bad thing, he said: Five members of Salesforce’s board members, including Benioff himself, have held their seats for fifteen years; Walravens believes that they could target those old hands and try to bring in some fresh blood with new ideas for the company.

“I think there’s pretty broad agreement that the board of directors needs to be refreshed,” Walravens said. 

Some want Salesforce to sell Slack and Tableau

Salesforce has been criticized for the sky-high $27.7 billion it paid for workplace messaging app Slack, especially since that deal came so soon after the sizable acquisitions of companies like data analysis firm Tableau and data integration company MuleSoft.

Many of those acquisitions, particularly Slack, were masterminded by Bret Taylor — the former co-CEO of Salesforce who stepped down in a surprise move late last year. In the wake of Taylor’s departure, some believe the involvement of the activist investors may push Salesforce towards recouping some of that investment by selling off those businesses. 

“Salesforce has been in ’empire building’ mode for too long and should focus more on its core market opportunities,” RBC analysts wrote in a note to clients this week. It continued: “One way to still extract value from assets we view as non-core is through divestiture.”

However, Salesforce likely wouldn’t get the full amount it paid for Slack if it sold it under current market conditions, RBC notes. However, it thinks that some acquisitions like MuleSoft, ClickSoftware, or Heroku would turn a profit if they were to be sold off, while minimizing disruptions to the business.

Salesforce could return to the office and revamp executive compensation

Elliott and Starboard could also push for relatively smaller, but no less meaningful changes, too. 

Walravens says that the activist firms could encourage Salesforce to rethink its office strategy. The company has invested a lot in a global real estate footprint including its Salesforce Tower headquarters in San Francisco. Those offices are now sitting largely empty as the company embraced remote work during the pandemic. While the company has downsized some of its office space as the tech market turns down, it still has a lot.

For some context, Benioff himself has indicated some willingness to bring employees back to the office: He recently faced backlash inside the company after suggesting that remote work may be responsible for lower productivity among employees hired during the pandemic years. Now, Salesforce may want to follow through and make sure its expensive real estate actually gets used.

Another change that Walravens thinks could be in the cards is a revamping of compensation, particularly for executives.

He says he thinks Elliott and Starboard might nudge Salesforce towards ending its practice of giving senior leaders major equity grants, instead encouraging a pay scheme that’s tied to performance-based goals. That would allow the board — which may come under activist control anyway — to direct Benioff’s team towards spending their time and energy in specific areas, Walravens said. 

Ultimately, Elliott Management has extensive experience in controlling its targets at the board level. It recently placed one of its own on the board of Pinterest, ending a boardroom battle that began last summer. So Salesforce should expect changes ahead, said David Larcker, a professor at Stanford Graduate School of Business. 

“They’ve studied this company a lot and they understand it probably as well as the board does,” Larcker said. “This is something the board’s going to have to pay attention to.”

Got a tip? Contact this reporter via email at pzaveri@insider.com or Signal at 925-364-4258. (PR pitches by email only, please.) 

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Yiddish writers’ mixed feelings about birthdays

Max_Beckmann_-_Self-Portrait_with_Champa

ערשט ניט לאַנג צוריק האָב איך געפּראַוועט אַ געבוירן־טאָג, האָב איך זיך גענומען אַרײַנטראַכטן אין דעם ענין „געבורטסטאָג“ (אַזוי האָבן מיר דאָס אַ מאָל אָנגערופֿן). איך האָב אײַנגעזען אַז אַ דאַנק דער דאַטע פֿון מײַן געבוירן־טאָג, דעם 24סטן דעצעמבער, ד״ה ערבֿ־ניטל, האָב איך זיך דערוווּסט אַז ס’איז דאָ אַ וועלט אויסער די נאָענטע ראַמען פֿון מײַן היימישער סבֿיבֿה, וווּ כּמעט אַלע זײַנען געווען ייִדן און אַז די וועלט איז אַנדערש פֿון מײַן וועלט.

ווי אַזוי? ווען אַ קליין קינד גייט ערגעץ מיט דער מאַמען אָדער דעם טאַטן, אײַנקויפֿן, צום דאָקטער אָדער וווּ עס זאָל נישט זײַן, זײַנען די ערשטע פֿראַגעס וואָס מע פֿרעגט, „ווי הייסטו, מיידעלע, ווי אַלט ביסטו און ווען איז דײַן געבוירן־טאָג?“. ווען איך האָב געענטפֿערט, „דעם 24סטן דעצעמבער“ זײַנען געווען צוויי אָפּרופֿן — אָדער „ווי שיין, ביסט אַ קריסטמעס־בייבי“ אָדער, „נעבעך, קריגסט מסתּמא ווייניקער מתּנות ווײַל ס’איז ניטל“. איך פֿלעג אַ ביסל שעמעוודיק (אָבער שטאָלץ) ענטפֿערן אַז מיר מאַכט עס ניט אויס ווײַל איך בין אַ ייִדישע און פּראַווע ניט קיין ניטל. דורך דעם ענין געבוירן־טאָג האָב איך אָנגעהויבן דערקענען אַנדערשקייטן צווישן זיך, אַ ייִדישער טאָכטער, און דער אַרומיקער וועלט, און דורכן דערקענען אַנדערשקייטן הייבט מען אָן אויספֿורעמען אַן אייגענע אידענטיטעט. דאָס הייסט, די גליקלעכע אָדער אומגליקלעכע דאַטע פֿון מײַן געבוירן ווערן איז געווען אַ וויכטיקער פֿאַקטאָר אין אויסקריסטאַליזירן מײַן פֿריִיִקע ייִדישע אידענטיטעט.

ס’איז טאַקע אַ ביסל איראָניש ווײַל דאָס פּראַווען געבוירן־טעג איז ניט געווען קיין אָנגענומענע זאַך בײַ מיזרח־אייראָפּעיִשע ייִדן: סע האָט געשמעקט מיט אַסימילאַציע, און דאָס שפּיגלט זיך אָפּ אין דער ייִדישער ליטעראַטור.

בעלאַ שאַגאַל גיט פּרעכטיק איבער די נײַקייט פֿון דעם מינהג אין דעם קאַפּיטל „דער געבורטסטאָג“ אין איר ביכל „די ערשטע באַגעגעניש“, אָפּגעגעבן איר ליבע מיט דעם קינסטלער מאַרק שאַגאַל מיט וועמען זי האָט חתונה געהאַט אין 1915. דאָס פּאָרל זיצט אין דרויסן און קוקט אויף דער לבֿנה און זי פֿאַרטראַכט זיך און זאָגט:

— מען זאָגט, יעדער איז געבאָרן אונטער זײַן שטערנדל… הער, ווי אַלט ביסטו? גיב איך מיט אַ מאָל אַ פֿרעג. — ווען ביסטו געבאָרן, דו ווייסט — גיסט אויף מיר אַ קוק, ווי איך וואָלט פֿון הימל אַראָפּגעשפּרונגען.

— ווילסט טאַקע וויסן? אָפֿט מאָל האָב איך מיך אַליין געפֿרעגט. מײַן טאַטע האָט מיר אַ מאָל אַ זאָג געטאָן, אַז צוליב דודן, מײַן ברודער, כּדי ער זאָל האָבן כאָטש אַ שטיקל „לעגאָטע“ [באַפֿרײַונג פֿון מיליטער־דינסט], האָט ער מיך פֿאַרשריבן מיט צוויי יאָר עלטער.

— איז ווען ביסטו פֿאָרט געבוירן געוואָרן?

און מאַרק הייבט אָן אויסצורעכענען אַז היות די מאַמע האָט פֿאָרגעוואָרפֿן דעם טאַטן הלמאַי ער זוכט נאָך ניט קיין שידוך פֿאַר זײַן שוועסטער כאַנקע, וואָס „איר איז דאָך, גאָט צו דאַנקען, באַלד זיבעצן יאָר“, מוז ער שוין זײַן העכסטנס נײַנצן.

ווען בעלאַ פֿרעגט אים אויב ער ווייסט אין וועלכן טאָג גענוי ער איז געבוירן געוואָרן, רופֿט ער זיך אָפּ, „ווער ווייס? ווער קאָן עס וויסן, חוץ דער מאַמען? — און די מאַמע האָט אַוודאי פֿאַרגעסן. געהאַט אַזוי פֿיל קינדער“.

אויסגערעכנט דעם טאָג ווען עס דאַרף אויספֿאַלן זײַן געבורטסטאָג מאַכט זי אים אַ סורפּריז. זי רײַסט אים אָן אַ בוקעט בלומען, קלײַבט צונויף אַלע אירע קאָלירטע טיכער, שטיקער צײַג, אַפֿילו אַראָפּגעשלעפּט פֿון בעט די פֿריילעכע, בונטע קאָלדרע און פֿאַלט צו אים אין שטוב אַרײַן און זאָגט אים אָן די בשׂורה אַז ס’איז הײַנט זײַן געבורטסטאָג. ער הייסט איר בלײַבן שטיין וווּ זי איז און ער גיט אַ שטעל אַוועק דעם מאָלברעט און פֿאַלט אָן אויף דעם לײַוונט. און זי דערמאָנט אים שפּעטער ווי ער האָט געמאַכט דאָס בילד, „גיסט פֿאַרב. רויטע, בלויע, ווײַסע, שוואַרצע. פֿאַרשלעפּסט מיך מיט דער שטראָם פֿון פֿאַרבן. מיט אַ מאָל מיך אָפּגעריסן פֿון דער ערד און אַליין שטופּסטו זיך אָפּ מיט איין פֿוס, ווי דיר וואָלט געווען צו ענג אין דײַן קליינעם צימער… און ביידע אין איינעם הויבן מיר זיך גרינג אויף איבער דעם אויסגעפּוצטן צימער און פֿליִען אַוועק זאַלבענאַנד“ . געענדיקט, זאָגט שאַגאַל, „מיר וועלן עס אָנרופֿן ‘דער געבורטסטאָג’“.

ס׳רובֿ מענטשן וואָס קוקן אויף דעם בילד ווייסן ניט דעם בראשית דערפֿון. מע ווייסט ניט אַז די אינספּיראַציע איז דאָס התלהבֿות וואָס קומט פֿון פּראַווען עפּעס נײַס, פֿון זאָגן אַז מע מעג איין טאָג אַ יאָר אַרויסהייבן דעם יחיד און פּראַווען פֿאַר אים, נאָר פֿאַר אים, אַ יום־טובֿ: אַ מאָדערנער געדאַנק אין דעם ייִדישן לעבן וואָס איז אין סתּירה מיט דער שליטה פֿונעם כּלל אין דעם טראַדיציאָנעלן ייִדישן לעבן.

אין אירע זכרונות, „מײַן עלטער-זיידנס ירושה“, אין דעם קאַפּיטל „אין ביאַליסטאָק“ אַנטוויקלט  קאַדיע מאָלאָדאָווסקי ווײַטער דעם געדאַנק אַז דאָס פּראַווען אַ געבוירן־טאָג איז נישט געווען קיין טראַדיציאָנעלע ייִדישע זאַך. פֿאַקטיש האָט מען אָפֿט גערופֿן דעם טאָג נישט „געבורטסטאָג“ אָדער „געבוירן־טאָג“ נאָר „אימענינעס“ (פֿונעם סלאַווישן וואָרט אימיאַ/אימיע) וואָס איז טײַטש „נאָמען“ ווײַל בײַ קריסטן איז דאָ אַ מינהג פֿון פּראַווען דעם טאָג וואָס איז פֿאַרבונדן מיט עמעצנס טויפֿנאָמען — בדרך־כּלל דער נאָמען פֿון אַ ביבלישער פֿיגור אָדער אַ סיינט (אַ קריסטלעכער צדיק). פֿאַרשטייט זיך, ייִדן האָבן ניט איבערגענומען דעם מינהג פֿון פּראַווען אַ טאָג לכּבֿוד אַ קריסטלעכן צדיק. נאָר זיי — ד״ה די מער אַסימילירטע — האָבן יאָ איבערגענומען דעם נאָמען פֿון דער קריסטלעכער פֿײַערונג.

מאָלאָדאָווסקי דערציילט ווי, זײַענדיק אין וואַרשע, האָט זי געוואָלט גיין הערן י. ל. פּרצן רעדן אָבער זי האָט ניט געקענט ווײַל ס’איז אויסגעפֿאַלן די „אימענינעס“ (געבורטסטאָג) פֿון דער עלטערער טאָכטער פֿון איר קרובֿה און זי מוז זײַן דערבײַ. זי גיט באַלד איבער אַז דער ענין „אימענינעס“ איז פֿאַר איר געווען „אַ נײַע נײַס. בײַ אונדז אין ברעזע האָב איך קײן מאָל ניט געהערט פֿון קײן אימענינעס. װער געדענקט דעם טאָג װען אַ מײדל װערט געבױרן? װאָס איז, זי דאַרף װערן בר־מיצװה?“

דער אמת איז, ווי מיר זעען בײַ בעלאַ שאַגאַלן, האָט מען אויך ניט געהאַלטן קיין חשבון פֿון ווען ייִנגלעך זײַנען געבוירן געוואָרן. אַפֿילו פֿון מײַן אייגענער משפּחה געדענק איך אַז מע האָט גיכער גערעדט וועגן ווען מע האָט עמעצן „פֿאַרשריבן“ (ד״ה אָפֿיציעל געגאַנגען אין אַ ביוראָ צו פֿאַרשרײַבן אַז אַ קינד איז געבוירן געוואָרן) ווי וועגן ווען ער אָדער זי איז געבוירן געוואָרן. דער טאָג ווען מע האָט עמעצן „פֿאַרשריבן“ האָט געקענט דינען ווי אַ געבוירן־דאַטע. וועמען מאַכט עס אויס? מע האָט דען געהאַט צײַט אָדער אינטערעס צו טראַכטן אויב מען איז אַ „ליבראַ“ אָדער אַן „אַקוואַריוס“? בײַ ייִדן האָט מען ווייניקער גערעדט וועגן געוויסע דאַטעס און אַפֿילו חדשים ווי וועגן צײַטן פֿון דעם ייִדישן לוח, ווי למשל, פֿאַר פּסח, נאָך שבֿועות, אָדער חנוכּה־צײַט. קאַדיע זאָגט עדות אויף דעם ווײַטער אין דעם זעלבן פּאַראַגראַף:

„װעגן מײַן געבױרן־טאָג איז בײַ אונדז אין שטוב שטענדיק געװען אַ װיכּוח. צי איך בין געבױרן געװאָרן ערבֿ־פּורים, צי ערבֿ־שבֿועות. אײן זאַך איז געװען זיכער, אַז ס’איז געװען אַ רעגנדיקער טאָג. אַ מאָל פֿלעגט מען אָפּפּסקענען אַז ס’איז געװען ערבֿ־פּורים. והאָ־ראַיה מען האָט געבאַקט אַ קױלעטש, צו דער פּורימדיקער סעודה. אָבער אױף שבֿועות באַקט מען אױך אַ קױלעטש, און אַ רעגן קען טרעפֿן ערבֿ־פּורים און ערבֿ שבֿועות. איז עס געבליבן הענגען אױף אַ תּיקו. צו מײַן גרױסן באַדױערן האָט מען געװוּסט גענױ װען עס איז געבױרן געװאָרן מײַן קרובֿהס טאָכטער, און אין װאַרשע איז געװען אַ מאָדע אימענינעס, װאָס צוליב דעם האָב איך ניט געקענט גײן הערן פּרצן אין הזמיר“.

אין זייער אַ רירנדיק קאַפּיטל זכרונות, „מײַן טאַטע פּראַוועט אַ געבורטסטאָג“, דערציילט דער פּאָעט איציק מאַנגער ווי זײַענדיק אין דער היים אין טשערנעוויץ, האָבנדיק געקומען פֿון וואַרשע, האָט דער טאַטע „כּמעט ווי שעמעוודיק מיך פֿאַרבעטן אויף אַ גלעזל ווײַן בײַ די ‘חסידים’ אין ווײַנקעלער“. ניט נאָר אים, דעם גאַסט, האָט ער פֿאַרבעטן, נאָר אויך זײַן ברודער און שוועסטער. די קינדער האָבן באַלד פֿאַרשטאַנען אַז ס’איז ניט סתּם, עס מוז זײַן עפּעס אַ סיבה.

אין ווײַנקעלער איז אַלץ קלאָר געוואָרן. „מײַן טאַטע האָט זיך אויפֿגעשטעלט אויף אַ בענקל מיט אַ גלעזל ווײַן אין דער האַנט… און האָט אָנגעהויבן: „איך ווער הײַנט אַלט פֿיר און פֿופֿציק יאָר“. הייסט עס, זעט מאַנגער אײַן, אַז צום ערשטן מאָל אין זײַן לעבן האָט דער טאַטע באַשלאָסן צו פֿײַערן זײַן געבורטסטאָג. 54 יאָר זענען פֿאַר אים געווען אַ וויכטיקע דאַטע“, אָבער ער גיט באַלד צו, „בײַ מײַן מאַמעס לעבן האָט קיינער בײַ אונדז נישט געפּראַוועט קיין געבורטסטעג. מײַן מאַמע האָט נישט געהאַלטן פֿון די ‘דײַטשע מאָדעס’“.

דער טאַטע האָט אָבער דעם געבורטסטאָג אין גאַנצן ניט אָפּגעמערקט אויף דעם דײַטשן שטייגער, נאָר מיט עכטער ייִדישער ערנסטקייט און פּאַטאָס. ווי דער טאַטע גיט צו פֿאַרשטיין די מענטשן אין ווײַנקעלער, „אַזוי ווי איך ווער הײַנט 54 יאָר און אַזוי ווי מײַן זיידע שמעון איז געשטאָרבן בײַ 54 יאָר און מײַן טאַטע אַבֿרהם איז געשטאָרבן בײַ 54 יאָר און אַזוי ווי מײַן עלטסטער זון פֿאָרט איצט צוריק קיין פּוילן, וויל איך פֿאַר אים — ווײַל איך ווייס נישט צי וועל איך אים נאָך אַ מאָל זען — דערציילן עפּעס פֿון מײַן לעבן“.

מאַנגער פֿאַרשטייט די וויכטיקייט פֿון דעם באַשלוס, אַז ס’איז נישט סתּם פּראַווען אַ געבורטסטאָג, נאָר אַ צײַט איבערצוגעבן עפּעס וועגן זיך, וועגן זײַן לעבן, און דווקא איצט, ווײַל וועדליק דער משפּחה־געשיכטע, ווער ווייסט וואָס קען געשען צו 54 יאָר?  און ער קאָמענטירט אויף דעם ווי נאָר אַ פּאָעט קען, „איך האָב געוווּסט, אַז מײַן טאַטע האָט ליב צו גראַמען, אָבער דאָס וואָס ער האָט אימפּראָוויזירט יענעם אָוונט איז געווען עפּעס מער, אַ סך מער ווי גראַם־שטראַם“.

דער געבורטסטאָג איז בײַ מאַנגערס טאַטן נישט קיין „דײַטשע מאָדע“, ניט קיין שׂימחה מיט פֿרייד און הוליען, נאָר גיכער, ווי מאַנגער גיט ווײַטער איבער, „אַ ווידוי און אַ ווייטיק, אַן על־חטא און אַ פּראָטעסט: אַ דערמאָנען די אייגענע יוגנט זײַנע, וואָס איז אויפֿגעגאַנגען אין אַ קליין מיזרח־גאַליציש שטעטעלע“. און זיכער, אין דער צײַט, נאָך אַלץ אַ זעלטענע זאַך דעמאָלט בײַ ייִדן.

אפֿשר געפֿינט זיך די פֿריסטע גוט־באַקאַנטע דערמאָנונג פֿון געבורטסטעג אין גאָלדפֿאַדענס פּיעסע „די כּישוף־מאַכערין“ וואָס עפֿנט זיך מיט אַ סצענע וווּ מע פּראַוועט דעם 17טן געבוירן־טאָג פֿון דער העלדינע מירעלע. די געסט זינגען איר דאָס ליד, „צו דײַן געבורסטאָג“ וואָס איז טאַקע געוואָרן דאָס ייִדישע געבורטסטאָג־ליד. דער לייענער אָדער צוקוקער פֿאַרשטייט אַז דאָס פּראַווען אַ געבורטסטאָג איז אַ גאַנץ נײַע אינאָוואָציע בײַ ייִדן. מירעלעס חתן הייסט דאָך מאַרקוס און דער נאָמען אַליין זאָגט אונדז אַז ער איז שוין מער מאָדערן, אַ משׂכּיל.

אין דער ווײַטערדיקער סצענע ווען מירעלעס טאַטע דערקלערט דעם נאַרישן/קלוגן פּעדלער האָצמאַכן, אַז דער יום־טובֿ וואָס מע פּראַוועט בײַ זיי איז מירעלעס געבורטסטאָג און ניט אירע תּנאָים אָדער חתונה, ווי האָצמאַך האָט פֿאַרשטאַנען פֿון דעם לעקעך און בראָנפֿן וואָס ער זעט אויפֿן טיש, זאָגט האָצמאַך: „וואָס הייסט דאָס באָדסטאָג? ס’הייסט אין דעם טאָג וואָס מען גייט אין באָד אַרײַן? ס’הייסט אַז מען דערמאָנט זיך בײַ אײַך דעם טאָג וואָס מען איז געבוירן געוואָרן דאַרף מען מאַכן אַ יום־טובֿ? און איך ווייס אַז איך פֿאַרשעלט מיר די יאָר און טאָג וואָס איך בין געבוירן געוואָרן אויף דער וועלט אַזוי פֿאַרשוואַרצט צו ווערן“.

האָפֿנטלעך איז דער טאָג פֿון אונדזער געבוירן ווערן אַ טאָג וואָס מיר בענטשן און וואָס מיר פֿאַרשעלטן נישט. איז לאָמיר טאַקע פֿאַרענדיקן מיט ביידע סטראָפֿעס פֿון גאָלדפֿאַדענס באַרימטן געבורטסטאָג ליד. מיר איז די צווייטע סטראָפֿע געווען אין גאַנצן נײַ. דאָס זייער דײַטשמערישע לשון אַליין זאָגט עדות אויף וואָס פֿאַר אַ נישט־ייִדישע זאַך „געבורטסטאַג“ איז דעמאָלט געווען בײַ ייִדן.

צו דײַן געבורטסטאַג, צו דײַן יום־טובֿ הײַנט

האָבן זיך פֿאַרזאַמלט דײַנע גוטע פֿרײַנד,

יעדער ווינטשט דיר צו געטרײַע רייד

פֿיל נחת, און פֿיל פֿרייד.

וויוואַט! וויוואַט! דו ליבעס קינד

וויוואַט! מיר ווינטשן דיר געזונט.

געבראַכט האָט יעדער אין זײַנע הענט

צו דײַן געבורטסטאַג דיר אַ פּרעזענט

פֿונעם גאַנצן האַרצן, נעמטס, נעמטס דיר

אַזוי ווינטשן אַלע מיר,

וויוואַט! וויוואַט!…

אָבער מיר ייִדן זײַנען אַ פֿאָלק וואָס נעמט איבער מינהגים, ווערטער, פֿירעכצן פֿון דער אַרומיקער סבֿיבֿה און פֿאַראייגענען דאָס אויף אונדזער אייגענעם שטייגער. דאָס ליד איז שוין אַרײַן אין פֿאָלק און געוואָרן אַ ייִדיש ליד, אַזוי פֿיל ייִדישלעכער ווי דאָס העברעיִשע „יום הולדת שׂמח“ צו דער מעלאָדיע פֿון „העפּי בערטדיי“.

The post Yiddish writers’ mixed feelings about birthdays appeared first on The Forward.

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Officials air findings in Nevada shooting that left 4 dead

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Authorities aired the results Monday of the investigation of an Election Day 2020 police shooting that killed a man in a vehicle after an upstairs neighbor killed two women, wounded a teenage girl and abducted a 12-year-old boy who died when he was shot as police approached.

The hearing about the Henderson police shooting of Jason Neo Bourne, a 38-year-old who changed his name in 2014 because he admired a movie character, suggested that Bourne shot the boy several times, including in the head, after police opened fire into the boy’s family’s Cadillac Escalade.

Bourne, sitting in the driver’s seat, fired seven shots with a .40 caliber handgun, according to evidence presented by Henderson police Detective Richard Christopher, the only investigator questioned during the hearing dubbed a public fact-finding review.

The proceeding, overseen by an attorney former state Assembly member and presented by a county prosecutor, did not conclusively answer whether one or more of the 27 shots fired by police struck the boy sitting in the passenger seat next to Bourne — who continued talking with a 911 dispatcher until gunfire erupted and was heard exclaiming “Yeah,” as officers began a second volley of fire.

However, “We believe Jason Bourne was responsible for the boy’s wounds,” Christopher said after summarizing results of autopsies of the four people who died that day.

Killed were Dianne Hawatmeh, 38, the boy’s mother; family housekeeper Veronica Muniz, 33, of Las Vegas; and the boy, Joseph Hawatmeh. The boy’s 16-year-old sister was shot several times and remains a paraplegic, family attorney Roger Croteau said Monday.

“We’re not making a statement one way or another who shot Joseph,” Croteau said following the emotional four-hour proceeding at the Clark County Commission auditorium.

Croteau is handling a federal lawsuit that the boy’s father, Iehab Hawatmeh filed in October in Las Vegas against Henderson police, departmental supervisors and the seven officers who fired shots that day.

“We do know that (police) took the first shot,” the attorney said. “One second later, the car was lit up with … contagion firing. They rushed the vehicle and didn’t wait for SWAT or a negotiator to arrive.”

Bourne was armed with a .40-caliber handgun, and police used 9mm handguns and .223-caliber tactical rifles. Medical examiners did not retrieve identifiable bullets from the boy’s body, according to the investigation.

The non-judicial public review is provided by Clark County law instead of a coroner’s inquest following a police-involved death if the district attorney makes a preliminary finding that involved officers will not face criminal prosecution. The officers themselves do not take part.

Police body-worn camera video and 911 audio aired Monday offered a heart-wrenching and dramatic account of 30 minutes of confusion that officials said may have stemmed from Bourne’s anger about a noise complaint that his downstairs neighbors made days before the shooting.

It also highlighted apparent delusions and ramblings of a man who called police 911 from the Escalade, changed the pitch of his voice several times, identified himself variously as a character from the future, “not from this planet” and the super villain Bane from the movie, “Batman,” and demanded that police provide him with a helicopter within minutes.

Joseph Hawatmeh could be heard in the background as Bourne abruptly interrupted apparent train-of-thought comments to the 911 dispatcher several times, uttering the phrase, “XM Satellite Radio 1.1 Gigawatts.”

Bourne had no criminal history and legally purchased his gun before he legally changed his name in 2014 from Christopher Curry, said Christopher, the police detective.

Bourne served nearly 15 years in the U.S. Air Force in various countries before being honorably discharged in 2017, Christopher said. He was a disabled veteran whose roommate, a retired Air Force member, told police was writing a book, regularly used marijuana and sometimes covered apartment windows fearing that others could see in.

The police detective said Bourne’s computer files showed he “strongly believed in QAnon theories,” including “that celebrities wear lifelike masks but are actually politicians that were part of a secret pedophile society that controlled the world.”

Among Bourne’s handwritten notes, Christopher found references to Bourne calling himself a superhero saving the world.

Iehab Hawatmeh dabbed his eyes several times as he sat through the four-hour proceeding with Croteau with three other family members.

Croteau later said they were not surprised by the material presented to the public. He said he believed the family has a strong wrongful death, negligence and civil rights case against police in federal court.

Attorneys representing Henderson have filed documents seeking the dismissal of the lawsuit, which seeks unspecified unspecified monetary damages. Court hearings have not been scheduled.

“As difficult as the situation was, my client believes the death of his boy wasn’t necessary,” Croteau said. “His family has suffered badly.”

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Police seek motive to Los Angeles-area mass shooting as 11th victim dies

2023-01-24T02:48:13Z

A 72-year-old suspected shooter killed himself when approached by police about 12 hours after he had carried out a Lunar New Year massacre at a dance club, according to Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna. Ten people were killed and another 10 wounded.

Investigators collected 42 bullet casings from the scene of one of California’s bloodiest mass shootings as they sought clues on Monday to what drove an elderly gunman to open fire in a dance hall he had frequented, killing 11 people, before taking his own life.

Police identified Huu Can Tran, 72, as the lone suspect in a massacre that unfolded Saturday night in the midst of a Chinese Lunar New Year celebration in the town of Monterey Park, a hub of the Asian-American community just east of downtown Los Angeles.

Authorities said he drove to another dance hall where a second, would-be attack was thwarted and later shot himself to death in his parked getaway vehicle as police closed in to make an arrest on Sunday, ending an intense manhunt some 12 hours after the rampage.

Ten people were killed and 10 others wounded when Tran opened fire at the Star Ballroom Dance Studio, a venue popular with older patrons of Asian descent, then drove off. One of the victims hospitalized in critical condition died of his wounds on Monday, Monterey Park Police Chief Scott Wiese told reporters.

All of the dead, six women and five men, were in their 50s, 60s and 70s, the coroner’s office said.

Even as Los Angeles-area police worked through second full day of their investigation, seven people were reported slain in a separate, mass shooting in the northern California coastal town of Half Moon May on Monday. read more

At a news briefing on Monday, Hilda Solis, a member of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, called Saturday’s gun violence the deadliest mass shooting on record in Los Angeles County, the most populous in the United States and home to some 10 million residents.

About 20 minutes after the attack, Tran barged into a second dance club, the Lai Lai Ballroom & Studio in the neighboring community of Alhambra, where an employee wrestled away the intruder’s semi-automatic assault-style pistol before any shots could be fired, officials said.

Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna credited Brandon Tsay, the operator of the family-owned club, as a “hero” for single-handedly disarming the gunman and preventing further bloodshed.

“That moment, it was primal instinct,” Tsay recounted in a New York Times interview, saying that the gunman fled the scene after a 90-second struggle. “Something happened there. I don’t know what came over me.”

Tran was not seen again until Sunday morning, when he had shot himself behind the wheel of his van, found parked in the city of Torrance, south of Los Angeles, as police surrounded his vehicle.

Luna said investigators, assisted by the FBI and the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), had recovered 42 spent shell casings and a large-capacity ammunition magazine from the Star studio.

He said the search of the suspect’s mobile home in a gated senior-living community in the town of Hemet, about 80 miles east of Los Angeles, turned up a rifle, various electronic devices and items “that lead us to believe the suspect was manufacturing homemade” weapons silencers.

Police also seized hundreds of rounds of ammunition from the dwelling, and a handgun was recovered from the white cargo van where the suspect took his own life, Luna said.

Authorities on Monday said a motive for the shooting remained a mystery.

Wiese said authorities were aware of unconfirmed reports that the violence may have been precipitated by jealousy or relationship issues, adding, “it’s part of what our investigators are diligently looking into.”

The sheriff said there was no immediate evidence that the gunman was related to any of his victims. Luna told reporters Tran had a “limited” past criminal history, including a 1990 arrest for unlawful possession of a firearm.

Hemet police said in a statement on Monday that Tran had come to the department twice in early January alleging “past fraud, theft and poisoning allegations involving his family” dating back 10 to 20 years, and had promised to return with documentation of his claims but never did.

Tran had an active trucking license and had owned a company called Tran’s Trucking Inc with a post office box address in Monterey Park, according to online records.

He had lived in the Los Angeles area since at least the 1990s and moved to the mobile home in Hemet in 2020, address records showed. A neighbor in his gated community described him as “meek” in an interview Monday.

But Adam Hood, who rented a home from Tran in the Los Angeles area, told Reuters he knew his landlord to be an aggressive, suspicious person with few friends.

But Hood said Tran, with whom he often conversed in Mandarin, enjoyed ballroom dancing, and was a longtime patron of the Star Ballroom, though he complained that others there were talking behind his back.

“He was a good dancer in my opinion,” Hood said. “But he was distrustful of the people at the studio, angry and distrustful. I think he just had enough.”

The coroner’s office on Monday confirmed the names of four victims, Valentino Alvero, 68 and three women – My Nhan, 65, Lilan Li, 63, and Xiujuan Yu, 57.

Related Galleries:

A woman holds her arms up in prayer as members of the community hold a prayer vigil near the scene of a shooting that took place during a Chinese Lunar New Year celebration, in Monterey Park, California, U.S. January 22, 2023. REUTERS/Allison Dinner

Flowers and heart balloons are left near the scene of a shooting that took place during a Chinese Lunar New Year celebration, in Monterey Park, California, U.S. January 22, 2023. REUTERS/Allison Dinner

A couple holds flowers and hands as members of the community hold a prayer vigil near the scene of a shooting that took place during a Chinese Lunar New Year celebration, in Monterey Park, California, U.S. January 22, 2023. REUTERS/Allison Dinner

Flowers are left near the scene of a shooting that took place during a Chinese Lunar New Year celebration, in Monterey Park, California, U.S. January 22, 2023. REUTERS/Allison Dinner

A man bows his head to pay his respects at the scene of a shooting that took place during a Chinese Lunar New Year celebration, in Monterey Park, California, U.S. January 22, 2023. REUTERS/Allison Dinner

Police officers guard the area near the location of a shooting that took place during a Chinese Lunar New Year celebration, in Monterey Park, California, U.S. January 22, 2023. REUTERS/Mike Blake

A man lights a candle at the entrance of the Star Ballroom Dance Studio after a mass shooting during Chinese Lunar New Year celebrations in Monterey Park, California, U.S. January 23, 2023. REUTERS/David Swanson – RC2HWY9CKQ57

A man holds flowers near the scene of a shooting that took place during a Chinese Lunar New Year celebration, in Monterey Park, California, U.S. January 22, 2023. REUTERS/Allison Dinner

The Lai Lai Ballroom and Studio dance school is closed after an incident in which a man walked in holding a gun that patrons were able to grab, according to witnesses, following a Monterey Park, California, shooting during a Chinese Lunar New Year celebration, in the Alhambra area of Los Angeles, California, U.S. January 22, 2023. REUTERS/Allison Dinner

A woman cries as members of the community hold a prayer vigil near the scene of a shooting that took place during a Chinese Lunar New Year celebration, in Monterey Park, California, U.S. January 22, 2023. REUTERS/Allison Dinner

A couple holds each other as members of the community hold a prayer vigil near the scene of a shooting that took place during a Chinese Lunar New Year celebration, in Monterey Park, California, U.S. January 22, 2023. REUTERS/Allison Dinner
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Seven shot dead in shooting in Half Moon Bay, California – media

2023-01-24T02:24:59Z

Seven people were killed in a mass shooting at two locations in the coastal northern California city of Half Moon Bay on Monday, CBS News reported.

The San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office on Twitter reported a shooting incident with multiple victims and said a suspect was in custody.

Half Moon Bay is about 30 miles (50 km) south of San Francisco.

Investigators had peacefully taken a 67-year-old man into custody about two hours after the incident, as a deputy spotted the suspect’s car in a parking lot of a San Mateo County Sheriff’s Department substation, the San Francisco Chronicle reported, citing a sheriff’s department statement.

The weapon was found in his car, the report said.

Deputies responding to a call found four people dead and a fifth victim wounded at the first location in Half Moon Bay, then found three more dead at another place nearby, the Chronicle reported.

One of the locations was a mushroom farm, the Chronicle said.

The shooting took place as the city of Monterey Park in Los Angeles County, about 400 miles (640 km) to the south, was still roiling from a mass shooting on Saturday that killed 11 people. read more

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At meetings, Proud Boys sing ‘Proud of Your Boy,’ a weepy ode to mom from Broadway’s ‘Aladdin,’ documents show

Former Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio, left. Adam Jacobs, Broadway's original Aladdin, right.Former Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio, left. Adam Jacobs, Broadway’s original Aladdin, right.

Allison Dinner/AP, left. Evan Agostini/AP, right.

  • Proud Boys are urged to sing a Broadway show tune at meetings, a new court document reveals.
  • The song is “Proud of Your Boy,” a weepy ode to making mom proud by the title character in “Aladdin.”
  • Leaders of the extremist group are urged to lead sing-alongs at bars where the song is on the jukebox.

Proud Boys members sing a Broadway-inspired “anthem” during their private meetings, according to a newly-revealed document from the extremist group’s ongoing sedition trial in Washington, DC.

The anthem is ‘Proud of Your Boy,” an emotional ode to winning mom’s approval from the hit musical, “Aladdin.”

“I’ve wasted time / I’ve wasted me / So say I’m slow for my age / A late bloomer, Okay, I agree,” Aladdin tells his mother in the song. “There’s no good reason that you should believe me / Not yet, I know, but / Someday and soon / I’ll make you proud of your boy.”

Singing the weepy ballad is not mandatory at meetings, but it’s strongly recommended, according to the new document, an 11-page meetings rulebook that a defense lawyer made public Monday in a court filing that seeks to bar federal prosecutors from showing it to the jury.

Five of the Proud Boys’ leaders are on trial in US District Court in Washington, DC, charged with sedition for their alleged roles in leading the violent attack on the Capitol on January 6, 2021. 

In the rulebook, group leaders are urged to select meeting venues where the song is on the jukebox. The rulebook also sets membership guidelines and details the group’s political beliefs on topics that include masturbation, slavery, and “housewives.”

“It is healthy to sing our anthem at least once a night, but this isn’t always possible,” the rulebook advises, without clarifying if the song is to be sung sincerely or mockingly.

“Ideally, we seek out venues that have a jukebox with this song available.”

The group often uses the initials “POYB” — for the slogan “Proud of Your Boy”— as a sign-off in social media postings.

Proud Boys founder Gavin McInnes has said for years that the group’s name was inspired by having to suffer through a rendition of “Proud of Your Boy” sung by a boy at his daughter’s school music recital.

“Do the ‘Proud Boys’ know their anthem was written by a gay Jew?” the Forward, a Jewish weekly, asked in a 2020 headline.  The story notes that McInnes hated the song, which he believed shows an emasculated Aladdin “apologizing for being a boy.”

The Southern Poverty Law Center, which calls the Proud Boys a violent, right-wing hate group, has also noted that the song “Proud of Your Boy” inspired the group’s name

The rulebook made public Monday reveals that the song is indeed the group’s anthem, and that singing it together is a part of group meetings, along with drinking toasts made “to guns,” “to housewives,” and “to the greatest civilization on earth and the men who built it.”

The rulebook provides the anthem’s lyrics, which include the promise, “I’ll make you proud of your boy / Believe me, bad as I’ve been, Ma / You’re in for a pleasant surprise.”

The song goes on: “Tell me that I’ve been a louse and loafer / You won’t get a fight here, no ma’am / Say I’m a goldbrick, a goof-off, no good / But that couldn’t be all that I am.”

It ends, “Mom, I will try to / Try hard to make you / Proud of your boy.”

The song’s composer, Alan Menken, and lyricist, Howard Ashman, did not immediately respond to Insider’s requests for comment. 

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TikTok reportedly threatened to terminate remote employees who don’t live near their assigned office location

hand holding phone with TikTok logoTikTok is just one of many tech companies taking a stronger stance against remote work.

NurPhoto / Contributor/Getty Images

  • TikTok is requiring employees to move back to their assigned offices, The Information reported Monday.
  • The company is threatening employees who fail to move with potential disciplinary action.
  • The move is part of TikTok’s broader crackdown on remote work.

Big tech’s crusade on remote work is gaining traction. 

Earlier this month, short-form video app TikTok sent a tough warning to a group of US employees whose home address didn’t match their office address. 

TikTok told the employees that they might be subject to disciplinary action — or even run the risk of losing their jobs — unless they can demonstrate proximity to their assigned office location, according to The Information, which first reported the news on Monday based on a message sent on TikTok’s internal software, Lark. 

The internal message also told those employees who had already moved back to their designated office locations that they would need to update their home address promptly in order to avoid disciplinary action, The Information said. 

The warning is just the latest in a series of steps TikTok has taken over the past few months to clamp down on remote work. The company announced last July that employees would need to come into the office at least twice a week beginning in August, according to the Wall Street Journal. TikTok subsequently rolled that date back to January 1, according to The Information. 

Over the past year, companies ranging from Twitter to Apple have also been rolling back their pandemic-era allowances on remote work. 

Since Elon Musk took the helm of Twitter in October, he’s repeatedly urged workers to return to the office.

In August 2022, senior leaders at Apple told workers they needed to return to the office at least three days a week

In early March 2022, Google told employees in certain locations to come into the office three days a week starting April, according to an internal memo seen by Insider. By late March 2022, Uber had told its staffers they would need to be in the office “at least half the time” starting April, Insider reported based on an internal memo. 

While many of these companies are now making big cuts to their workforce, TikTok has yet to announce mass layoffs. However, the Chinese video giant is up against mounting security concerns as more and more US entities have begun banning TikTok.

In December 2022, the Senate voted to ban TikTok on government devices and almost 30 states have now introduced partial or full bans. Universities are also taking steps to ban the platform.  

TikTok did not immediately respond to Insider’s request for a comment.

 

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A lawyer accidentally called Elon Musk ‘Mr. Tweet’ during the Tesla shareholder trial; Musk said it’s pretty accurate

elon musk twitterThe mistake came during a trial brought by Tesla shareholders accusing Musk, who is also the CEO of Twitter, of committing securities fraud via tweet.

Dave Smith/Business Insider

  • An attorney representing shareholders suing Elon Musk accidentally called him “Mr. Tweet” during Musk’s testimony.
  • The attorney, Nicholas Porritt, said it was a “Freudian slip,” but Musk joked it was a fitting name. 
  • The trial is the result of a class-action shareholder lawsuit that alleges Musk committed securities fraud via tweet in 2018.

Elon Musk may have found himself with a new nickname – by mistake. 

An attorney representing a group of shareholders suing Elon Musk accidentally called him “Mr. Tweet” during a tense moment in Musk’s testimony on Monday. 

The attorney, Nicholas Porritt, called the gaffe a “Freudian slip,” but Musk joked it was “probably an accurate description.” 

Musk, who is the CEO and owner of Twitter as of late last year, has never shied away from using the platform. 

In fact, the interaction between Porritt and Musk came during a trial brought by Tesla shareholders who have accused Musk of committing securities fraud via tweet. Specifically, the shareholders accuse Musk of illegally manipulating Tesla’s stock price when he sent a 2018 tweet saying he was considering taking Tesla private at $420 per share with “funding secured.”   

Musk defended the tweet in court, maintaining that he “wanted to make sure shareholders would know what my intent was.” Musk also said that he believed the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund would “unequivocally” help support his plan to take the company private.

The deal never happened, and during his testimony, Musk accused the fund of “backpedaling” after the tweet was sent. 

 

Catch up with more coverage from the trial:

Elon Musk accuses a major Saudi investor of ‘ass-covering’ in a trial over his ‘funding secured’ Tesla tweet

Elon Musk just took the stand in a trial over his ‘funding secured’ tweet — catch up with 8 stand-out quotes from his testimony

Elon Musk testifies that he thinks the number 420 has ‘karma,’ but he’s not sure if it’s ‘good or bad’

Elon Musk made sure the jury knew that short-sellers weren’t ‘a seller of small stature’ during the Tesla shareholder trial

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Seven dead in shooting in Half Moon Bay, Calif. – CBS News

2023-01-24T02:04:48Z

Seven people were killed in a mass shooting at two locations in the coastal northern California city of Half Moon Bay on Monday, CBS News reported.

The San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office reported a shooting incident with multiple victims and that a suspect was in custody.

Half Moon Bay is about 30 miles (50 km) south of San Francisco. The shooting took place as the city of Monterey Park in Los Angeles County was still roiling from a mass shooting on Saturday that killed 11 people.

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Suspect in Custody After At Least 7 Killed in Shootings in Northern California

HALF MOON BAY, Calif. — Seven people were killed in two related shootings Monday at a mushroom farm and a trucking firm in a coastal community south of San Francisco, and a suspect was in custody, officials said.

San Mateo County Board of Supervisors President Dave Pine says four people were killed at the farm and three at the trucking business on the outskirts of Half Moon Bay, a city about 30 miles (48 kilometers) south of San Francisco.

It wasn’t immediately clear how the locations were connected.

California state Sen. Josh Becker, who represents the area, said people were killed in separate shootings. San Mateo County Supervisor David Canepa tweeted that one shooting happened at a mushroom farm.

The San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office tweeted just before 5 p.m. that a suspect was in custody.

“There is no ongoing threat to the community at this time,” the sheriff’s office said.

Television footage from the area showed officers taking a man into custody without incident.

Aerial television images also showed police officers collecting evidence from a farm with dozens of greenhouses.

The shooting followed the killing of 11 people late Saturday at a ballroom dance hall in Southern California.

“We are sickened by today’s tragedy in Half Moon Bay,” Dave Pine, president of the San Mateo County Board of Supervisors, said in a statement. “We have not even had time to grieve for those lost in the terrible shooting in Monterey Park. Gun violence must stop.”